December 09, 2009

Michael Lally: Poetry and Brain Surgery (Terence Winch)

On Friday, Nov. 13, 2009, poet and actor Michael Lally
underwent brain surgery at Weill-Cornell hospital in Manhattan.The progression from normal existence to brain surgery took about two
weeks—from the time he first experienced some enigmatic symptoms, to a host of
tests, rapid research on doctors and hospitals, and the final choice of
treatment.A few days after the
three-hour operation, further tests determined that the tumor was benign and
the prognosis for full recovery excellent.

[at left: The
Extraction of the Stone of Madness (The Cure of Folly), ca.
147580,
by Hieronymus Bosch (ca.14501516). Removing “stones” from
the head was a fairly common medieval operation; Bosch, however, depicts a
flower as the object being removed.]

Readers of Michael’s excellent blog, Lally’s Alley, which is
usually a vehicle for his passionately held opinions on politics, writing,
music, movies, and art, along with his reflections on life and his seemingly uncontrollable
need to create all manner of lists, have, in the last month or so, been given
something else—the day-to-day chronicle of a poet regaining his cognitive
abilities.He had great difficulty at
first putting words and sentences together; even listening to music or watching
a movie were challenges. But over the past few weeks he has steadily gotten
back his formidable powers of expression.

It is clear, however, that Michael has, in very
characteristic fashion, grown to value the traumatic and extraordinary
experience he has been through, enjoying a soul-deep transformation in how he
perceives the world around us.[photo: Will Farrell, His Holiness the Lally Dama, Terence Winch, Nov. 14, 2009]

Here’s a post he did from about a week after the operation
(which I’ve re-arranged a little into a more poem-like shape):

Comments

Michael Lally: Poetry and Brain Surgery (Terence Winch)

On Friday, Nov. 13, 2009, poet and actor Michael Lally
underwent brain surgery at Weill-Cornell hospital in Manhattan.The progression from normal existence to brain surgery took about two
weeks—from the time he first experienced some enigmatic symptoms, to a host of
tests, rapid research on doctors and hospitals, and the final choice of
treatment.A few days after the
three-hour operation, further tests determined that the tumor was benign and
the prognosis for full recovery excellent.

[at left: The
Extraction of the Stone of Madness (The Cure of Folly), ca.
147580,
by Hieronymus Bosch (ca.14501516). Removing “stones” from
the head was a fairly common medieval operation; Bosch, however, depicts a
flower as the object being removed.]

Readers of Michael’s excellent blog, Lally’s Alley, which is
usually a vehicle for his passionately held opinions on politics, writing,
music, movies, and art, along with his reflections on life and his seemingly uncontrollable
need to create all manner of lists, have, in the last month or so, been given
something else—the day-to-day chronicle of a poet regaining his cognitive
abilities.He had great difficulty at
first putting words and sentences together; even listening to music or watching
a movie were challenges. But over the past few weeks he has steadily gotten
back his formidable powers of expression.

It is clear, however, that Michael has, in very
characteristic fashion, grown to value the traumatic and extraordinary
experience he has been through, enjoying a soul-deep transformation in how he
perceives the world around us.[photo: Will Farrell, His Holiness the Lally Dama, Terence Winch, Nov. 14, 2009]

Here’s a post he did from about a week after the operation
(which I’ve re-arranged a little into a more poem-like shape):